Answer:
The Civil Rights Bill ensured constitutional rights for African Americans and other minorities.
Explanation:
All other answers don't really make sense
Answer:
B) Joyce makes the idea of an invaded home more personal for readers by writing about two ordinary people in a modern city rather than about a mythical Greek warrior.
Explanation:
The statement that best explains how the modern story transforms the ideas of the original myth is option B because Joyce makes a narration of a more relatable situation for modern readers.
Joyce uses the narration of a home invasion because it would be more relatable to modern readers than talking about fighting in wars or a mythical Greek warrior.
Answer:
All human beings have a bad side, and sometimes it is difficult to control it. People like Dr Jekyll have a tendency not to consider other people's feelings, they enjoy hurting others and they fail to resist negative forces. In my opinion, as long as individuals control their evil behavior, it will be difficult to make a better society because there will always be somebody who wants to cause mental and physical painto others.
Answer: Umm... I think its "That courage like a rock"
Explanation: I could be wrong, but its a simile, so its figurative.
By having Winterbourne first meet Randolph instead of Daisy, Henry James is able to establish some indirect inferences about Daisy. She has a younger brother, who is a bit impetuous, as the reader will find Daisy to be. He is a bit manipulative in that he approaches someone he has never met to ask a favor, "Will you give me a lump of sugar?" and with this he pushes his advantage and takes three cubes. This is also very much like his sister as she uses her feminine wiles to get Winterbourne to promise to take her to see the castle. So, in these things, James is able to introduce, in Randolph, some of the traits that the reader will later find in Daisy.
Ramdolph sybolizes the the patriotic fervor seen in many Americans, which the Europeans cannot seem to understand. In Randolph's eyes everything is better in America, 'I can't get any candy here—any American candy. American candy's the best candy," ""American men are the best." He says that even the moon is better in America, "You can't see anything here at night, except when there's a moon. In America there's always a moon!" This unrealistic view of his home country shows his unreserved love for America, but also tends to point towards the shortcomings of teh European countries and his dislike for them, in that they have nothing to compare to America, in Randolph's mind. This is, often, the way in which people see Americans, both proud and boastful, without a desire to understand other cultures.